Crowd Mourns Sri Lanka’s Matriarch
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COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Sirimavo Bandaranaike, the world’s first female prime minister and the matriarch of Sri Lankan politics, was remembered at a state funeral Saturday with fondness and respect.
Hundreds of mourners stood under the blazing afternoon sun to catch a glimpse of her flower-covered casket as it was carried through the streets in a military procession. The coffin was lowered into the ground after a 19-gun salute.
Though Bandaranaike’s leftist policies were criticized by some for contributing to the country’s social unrest, D. M. Jayaratne, a governing party lawmaker who delivered the funeral oration, said the former premier “won the affection of all religions and races.”
Bandaranaike, 84, died of a heart attack Tuesday, shortly after casting her ballot in the parliamentary election that saw her daughter, President Chandrika Kumaratunga, gain enough seats and supporters to form a new coalition government.
Kumaratunga wants the lawmakers to approve a new constitution giving the minority Tamils greater autonomy as a way to end the 17-year war waged by Tamil Tiger rebels for a homeland.
Bandaranaike had requested a burial instead of the traditional Buddhist cremation, and was buried next to her husband in her ancestral home, Horagolla.
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